This handbook is currently in development, with individual articles publishing online in advance of print publication. At this time, we cannot add information about unpublished articles in this handbook, however the table of contents will continue to grow as additional articles pass through the review process and are added to the site. Please note that the online publication date for this handbook is the date that the first article in the title was published online.
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Cover -- Half Title: PUBLIC HEALTH -- Author Bio -- Book Title: PUBLIC HEALTH -- Copyright -- Dedication -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- CASE STUDY PODCASTS -- ABBREVIATIONS AND COMMON DEFINITIONS -- COMMON DEFINITIONS -- Springer Publishing Resources -- Section 1: INTRODUCTION -- Chapter 1: THE ORIGINS OF PUBLIC HEALTH -- LEARNING OBJECTIVES -- OVERVIEW: PUBLIC HEALTH, POPULATION HEALTH, AND POPULATION HEALTH SCIENCE: KEY DISTINCTIONS -- THE HISTORY OF PUBLIC HEALTH -- THE U.S. PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM -- GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH -- THE EVOLUTION OF ACADEMIC SCHOOLS OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN THE UNITED STATES -- WHAT ARE THE MAJOR PUBLIC HEALTH ACHIEVEMENTS OVER THE 20TH CENTURY AND MORE RECENTLY IN THE UNITED -- SUMMARY -- DISCUSSION QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 2: UNDERSTANDING THE GLOBAL BURDEN OF DISEASE AND DISABILITY -- LEARNING OBJECTIVES -- OVERVIEW: WHAT IS DISEASE AND DISABILITY? -- CONTRASTING HEALTH AND DISEASE -- THE GLOBAL BURDEN OF DISEASE -- SUMMARY -- DISCUSSION QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 3: AT THE HEART OF PUBLIC HEALTH: PREVENTION -- LEARNING OBJECTIVES -- OVERVIEW: CORE PRINCIPLE OF PUBLIC HEALTH: PREVENTION -- PREVENTION: CREATING THE HEALTHIEST POSSIBLE LIFE -- PREVENTION BASICS: TYPES OF PREVENTION -- LEVERAGING PREVENTION: UPSTREAM VERSUS DOWNSTREAM APPROACHES -- PREVENTION BASICS: APPLYING NOTIONS OF PREVENTION TO LOCAL, NATIONAL, AND GLOBAL POPULATIONS -- SUMMARY -- DISCUSSION QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 4: AT THE HEART OF PUBLIC HEALTH: SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH AND HEALTH EQUITY -- LEARNING OBJECTIVES -- OVERVIEW: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HEALTH INEQUITIES AND THE SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH -- HEALTH EQUITY -- TRADE-OFFS THAT MAY BE INHERENT IN IMPROVING OVERALL HEALTH AND REDUCING HEALTH INEQUITIES -- HEALTH INEQUITIES IN THE UNITED STATES -- HEALTH INEQUITIES GLOBALLY.
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"We all care about our health. We all want to be healthy individuals and want our children, parents, partners, and friends to be healthy. Public health aspires to create a world where we can all live our healthiest possible life, to realize our full human potential. This book aims to serve as an introduction to public health for anyone who is interested in this ideal."
This article examines disaster preparedness and community responses to Hurricane Matthew in semi-urban and rural towns and villages in Grande-Anse, Haiti. Based on an ethnographic study conducted in the department of Grande-Anse one week after the hurricane made landfall in Haiti, the article focuses on the perspectives of citizens, community-based associations and local authorities in the affected areas. Sixty-three (63) interviews and 8 community meetings (focus groups) were conducted in 11 impacted sites in 8 communes. Results suggest that preexisting conditions in impacted communities, rather than deliberate and coordinated disaster management strategies, shaped levels of preparedness for and response to the disaster. Affected populations relied primarily on family networks and local forms of solidarity to attend to basic needs such as shelter, health and food. The main argument presented is that Haiti, by virtue of its geographic location, lack of resources, institutional fragility and vulnerability, must systematically integrate community-based assets and capacities in its responses to and management of disasters. Further, it is critical for the government, Haitian institutions, and society to apply integrated risk reduction and management and disaster preparedness measures in all aspects of life, if the country is to survive the many disasters to come in a time of climate change. These measures should be embedded in recovery and reconstruction efforts after Hurricane Matthew.
In the spring of 2009, the Fargo, North Dakota, metropolitan area had 5 days to lay millions of sandbags to avoid devastation from record flooding of the Red River of the North. The community was able to successfully mitigate the flooding and escape potentially catastrophic economic, physical, and mental health consequences. We hypothesized that Fargo flood protection efforts reflected the community resilience factors proposed by Norris, Stevens, Pfefferbaum, et al. (2008): citizen involvement in mitigation efforts, effective organizational linkages, ongoing psychosocial support, and strong civic leadership in the face of rapidly changing circumstances. This community case report utilizes an extensive review of available sources, including news reports, government documents, research articles, and personal communication. Results demonstrate that Fargo's response to the threat of catastrophic flooding was consistent with Norris et al.'s (2008) factors of community resilience. Furthermore, success in 2009 carried over into future flood prevention and response efforts, as well as a structured approach to building psychological resilience. This case study contributes to the literature on community resilience by describing a community's successful efforts to avert a potentially catastrophic disaster.
Russia's military incursion into Ukraine triggered the mass displacement of two-thirds of Ukrainian children and adolescents, creating a cascade of population health consequences and producing extraordinary challenges for monitoring and controlling preventable pediatric infectious diseases. From the onset of the war, infectious disease surveillance and healthcare systems were severely disrupted. Prior to the reestablishment of dependable infectious disease surveillance systems, and during the early months of the conflict, our international team of pediatricians, infectious disease specialists, and population health scientists assessed the health implications for child and adolescent populations. The invasion occurred just as the COVID-19 Omicron surge was peaking throughout Europe and Ukrainian children had not received COVID-19 vaccines. In addition, vaccine coverage for multiple vaccine-preventable diseases, most notably measles, was alarmingly low as Ukrainian children and adolescents were forced to migrate from their home communities, living precariously as internally displaced persons inside Ukraine or streaming into European border nations as refugees. The incursion created immediate impediments in accessing HIV treatment services, aimed at preventing serial transmission from HIV-positive persons to adolescent sexual or drug-injection partners and to prevent vertical transmission from HIV-positive pregnant women to their newborns. The war also led to new-onset, conflict-associated, preventable infectious diseases in children and adolescents. First, children and adolescents were at risk of wound infections from medical trauma sustained during bombardment and other acts of war. Second, young people were at risk of sexually transmitted infections resulting from sexual assault perpetrated by invading Russian military personnel on youth trapped in occupied territories or from sexual assault perpetrated on vulnerable youth attempting to migrate to safety. Given the cascading risks that Ukrainian children and ...
A new introduction to a timeless dynamic: how the movement of humans affects health everywhere. International migrants compose more than three percent of the world's population, and internal migrants—those migrating within countries—are more than triple that number. Population migration has long been, and remains today, one of the central demographic shifts shaping the world around us. The world's history—and its health—is shaped and colored by stories of migration patterns, the policies and political events that drive these movements, and narratives of individual migrants. Migration and Health offers the most expansive framework to date for understanding and reckoning with human migration's implications for public health and its determinants. It interrogates this complex relationship by considering not only the welfare of migrants, but also that of the source, destination, and ensuing-generation populations. The result is an elevated, interdisciplinary resource for understanding what is known—and the considerable territory of what is not known—at an intersection that promises to grow in importance and influence as the century unfolds
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